Carl v. Thiel

277 S.W. 485, 211 Ky. 328, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 20, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 485 (Carl v. Thiel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carl v. Thiel, 277 S.W. 485, 211 Ky. 328, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 875 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

As a citizen and taxpayer of Kenton county, the appellant and plaintiff below, Joseph Carl, brought this equity action in the Kenton circuit court to enjoin appellee and defendant below, who is the sheriff of the county, from proceeding to distrain personal property or to levy upon and sell real property in the enf orcement of the collection of the state and county taxes during the month of December, 1925, and from declaring taxes uncollected by December 1 delinquent and from collecting either interest or penalties on such taxes at any time -during that month, all upon the ground that defendant as sheriff of the county and whose duty it is to collect such taxes, was threatening do and would proceed in the manner indicated unless enjoined by the court, and that such threatened action on his part would be contrary to chapter 108, page 312, of the Session’s Acts of 1924, wherein it is provided that state and county taxes due and collectible in the year 1925 should not become delinquent until after December 31 of that year, instead of December 1 under the law as it existed1 at the time of the enactment of that chapter.

A demurrer filed by defendant to the petition was not-acted on, and he filed his answer in which he alleged that the 1924 act was unconstitutional and void, especially as to him during his incumbency in office, because according to his past experience he would be deprived of enforcing the collection of about $8,000.00 of delinquent taxes before his term of office expired and upon which he would receive fees and. commissions amounting to about $500.00, and that the effect of the 1924 act would be to reduce his compensation after he had been •elected to and installed in office contrary to the pro *330 visions of sections 161 and '235 of onr Constitution. It was, furthermore, alleged and insisted on, that under the provisions of section 4239a of Carroll’s 1922'Ken-tucky Statutes, the sheriff and his surety become responsible for the total of all tax bills, books and stubs-i;or which he is required_to receipt the county court clerk by the terms of that section, and that if the 1924 act is-to be enforced during his term so as to deprive him from proceeding to declare any of the unpaid taxes delinquent, from and after which only he may proceed to enforce their collection with interest and penalties, then it would have the effect to impose a liability on him and his sureties without an opportunity for him to relieve himself' against it. A demurrer filed to the answer was overruled and plaintiff declining to plead further, his petition was dismissed, to reverse which he prosecutes this-appeal.

Before addressing ourselves to the question as to-whether the 1924 act contravenes1 the provisions- of either of the two sections of the Constitution referred to, as applicable to defendant, we deem it proper to say that his-pleading was not sufficient to entitle him to rely -on that objection to the validity of the act, since he nowhere-alleged that the aggregate -of all salary, fees and commissions of his office for the year 1925 up to the time of filing his answer, or to1 December 1, aggregated less than his constitutional salary of $5,000.00 and reasonable compensation for his necessary deputies, so as to show that the additional $500.00 of which he claims to be deprived -through the operation of the 1924 act would be necessary in -order to enable him to collect from- the emoluments of' his -office the maximum constitutional sum of $5,000.00' for himself and reasonable compensation for his deputies. It requires no argument to show that defendant would not be affected by the provisions of the act he attacks, unless he was entitled to retain the extra $500.00 of which, he claims to be deprived because of its provisions. Shipp v. Bradley, 196 Ky. 523, and 210 Ky. 51.

Independently, however, -of that proposition we think there is no merit in the point advanced and now under consideration. Learned counsel for appellee relies on the cases of Bright v. Stone, 20 Ky. L. R. 817; Thomas v. Hager, 120 Ky. 428; Slayton v. Rogers, 128 Ky. 106; Bosworth v. Ellison, 148 Ky. 708; Anderson v. Burton, 174 Ky. 459, and Brown v. Laurel County Fiscal Court, 175 Ky. 747. He could have more than sextupled that listr *331 as will he seen from the notes to the two sections of the Constitution referred to in the 1922 edition of our statutes, hut counsel’s trouble lies, not in the fact of the unsoundness of the cases to which he did or could have referred, but in the fact that the doctrine announced in all of them does not fit the facts of this case. In some of them a fixed salary of the officer at the time he was inducted into office was attempted to be changed during his term of office, either by being decreased or increased, and we held that such an effort plainly contravened the constitutional provisions and did not apply to the current term of any officer who had become such before the attempted increase or decrease. All the others of those eases were where the scale of fees or commissions for specified services were attempted to be altered -or changed during the term of the -officer to- which they applied, and .after he had taken office, which plainly contravene section 161 of the 'Constitution; while section 235 is more applicable to fixed salaries; but we have neither of such cases here. The statute does not pretend to alter or change in any manner the scale of defendant’s commissions for the collection of state or county taxes in his county; and the only possible and remote effect that the statute could have on the aggregate of defendant’s fees and -commissions for collecting any part of the taxes due in 1925, is the probability that some of the taxpapers •pf Kenton county will suffer themselves to become delinquent so as to incur the statutory interests and penalties, and which is alleged in the petition to aggregate as much as $8,000.00, which necessarily is only based on the opinion of defendant. However, if that opinion was an absolutely demonstrated fact it would still invade no constitutional right of defendant, since as long as there is no change in his fixed salary, nor any change in the scale of his fees or commissions, he has no- right of complaint, although the statute which he attacks may have the possible effect to reduce the services to be performed by him, or diminish the aggregate am'ount upon which he is entitled to receive his fixed fees- and commissions.

In the -case of Purnell v. Mann, 105 Ky. 87, it was argued that what was then known as the Goebel Election Law took away from the officers who composed the canvassing board, of elections prior thereto-, their fees and compensations as members of such canvassing board by imposing that duty upon a canvassing board 'created by that statute, all -of which' was done during the terms of *332 the members of the old canvassing board, and that the act for that reason was unconstitutional, at least to the extent that its effect was to deprive the members of the old board of their compensation as such.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 485, 211 Ky. 328, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carl-v-thiel-kyctapphigh-1925.